Published by zonder uitgever, Leiden, 1960
Seller: Bij tij en ontij ..., Kloosterburen, NL, Netherlands
Paperback, 24 cm, 21 pp. Cond.: goed / good.
Published by Leiden, 1960
Seller: Bij tij en ontij ..., Kloosterburen, NL, Netherlands
geniet, 24 cm, 21 pp. Rede uitgesproken bij de aanvaarding van een ambt aan de Universiteit te Leiden. Cond.: goed / good.
Language: English
Published by Oxford University Press, 1932
ISBN 10: 0198512430 ISBN 13: 9780198512431
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. First Edition. [First edition of the first book to apply quantum mechanics to solid-state physics.] Near fine. 1932 printing. Bound in publisher's blue cloth, gilt-lettered on spine. Hardcover. No dust jacket. Good binding and cover. Clean, unmarked pages. Name on fep. 384 pages. Van Vleck shared the 1977 Nobel Prize in physics with Neville Mott and Philip Anderson, for research on the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems.
Published by Edinburgh & London: Oliver and Boyd, 1962., 1962
Seller: Ted Kottler, Bookseller, Redondo Beach, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. Frontispiece, 79 pp; illus. Original cloth. Signature of former owner on flyleaf, bookplate on pastedown. Very Good, without dust jacket. John Hasbrouck van Vleck: Nobel Prize, Physics, 1977 (shared with Philip Warren Anderson and Nevill Francis Mott), 'for their fundamental theoretical investigations of the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems.'.
Published by American Physical Society, 1951., (Lancaster):, 1951
Seller: Jeff Weber Rare Books, Neuchatel, NEUCH, Switzerland
Large 8vo. (266 x 205 mm). iii, 411 pp. Photos, figs., tables. Later green cloth, gilt-stamped spine title. Near fine. Two original papers in one collection by NOBEL PRIZE winners Van Vleck and Bardeen. Van Vleck received his award, which he shared with Philip W. Anderson and Nevill Mott, in 1977 "for their fundamental theoretical investigations of the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems." These breakthroughs held great importance for the chemistry of complex compounds, geology, and later technology. [Wasson]. Van Vleck states in his notes that he contributed this article, a reconsideration and revisiting of his work with E.L. Hill during 1926-27 as a memorial to John Torrence Tate, who served as his editor-in-chief during this period. "As a subject becomes older, and better understood, it is usually possible to present its fundamentals in a simpler form than at the outset. This is true of the rotational distortion of molecular spectral terms. When [E.L.] Hill and I first investigated this problem, we were able to deduce certain rather recalcitrant matrix elements only by adaptation of the results of a somewhat abstruse paper of Dirac's on noncommutative algebra. Since that time, the advent of nuclear spins and quadrupole moments has added to the complexity of molecular coupling problems, and the techniques of microwave spectra reveal hyperfine structures far beyond the possibility of detection twenty-five years ago." [from the Introduction]. Bardeen is the one of a select few to have been awarded two Nobel prizes, one in 1956 and one in 1972. He is one of the originators of the transistor, and co-creator of the BCS theory of superconductivity. [Wasson]. Interestingly, Bardeen was a student of Van Vleck, who took great pride in having taught quantum mechanics to two of the three inventors of the transistor (the other being Walter Brattain). He remembers Bardeen as the star of the class and lamented that he cannot claim Bardeen as one of his Ph.D. students. [AIP]. Bardeen's paper is an address given to the Department of Physics at the University of Illinois, Urbana, concerning aspects of his work in superconductivity. Provenance: David Middleton (b. 1920), noted pioneer in the field of statistical communication theory (last name gilt-stamped on spine). Middleton served as Van Vleck's personal research assistant, and they authored several important papers together. [AIP]. Interview of John H. Van Vleck by Charles Wiener, 1973, Niels Bohr Library & Archives, AIP; Wasson, Nobel Prize Winners, p. 1088 (Van Vleck) and 55-59 (Bardeen).
Publication Date: 1977
Seller: Antiquariat Luna, Lüneburg, Germany
Signed
Kein Einband. Condition: Gut. datiert 10 December1977, signiert von dem amerikanischen Physiker und Nobelpreisträger John H. Van Vleck (1899-1980) . leichte Gebrauchspuren, . paper signed by van Vleck Size: 11x8 cm. Vom Wissenschaftler signiert. Autograph.
Seller: Markus Brandes Autographs GmbH, Kesswil, TG, Switzerland
Manuscript / Paper Collectible Signed
Signed card, 5 x 3 inch, signed in black ink "John H. Van Vleck" (also described below by the collector in blue ink), attractively mounted (removable) for fine display with a photograph of John Hasbrouck Van Vleck (altogether 8,25 x 11,75 inch), in very fine condition.
Seller: Markus Brandes Autographs GmbH, Kesswil, TG, Switzerland
Photograph Signed
Signed glossy photograph, shows John Hasbrouck Van Vleck in a chest-up portrait, 5 x 7 inch, signed in blue ballpoint ink "John H. Van Vleck", in very fine condition.